Stigma affects marginalized communities differently. Ensure your campaign features survivors of different races, genders, socioeconomic statuses, and abilities. A single white, affluent face cannot represent a global problem.
It serves as a reminder that while Hollywood builds gleaming "Skyscrapers" of content meant for the global elite, a massive portion of the world’s population is trying to find a back door to get in, settling for a lower resolution view, but demanding the same access to the show.
Moving beyond passive reading, many awareness campaigns host live events where survivors speak directly to communities—schools, corporate HR departments, or police academies. Hearing a survivor describe their interaction with a system (a hospital, a court, an employer) is a more potent training tool than any manual.
Legal Sourcing: The most secure and high-quality way to experience Skyscraper is through official streaming platforms (such as Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, or Apple TV) or by purchasing the physical Blu-Ray disc.
The #MeToo movement was a masterclass in collective survivor storytelling. By creating safe, anonymous or attributed digital platforms (story banks), campaigns allow survivors to contribute at their own pace. This builds a library of lived experience that advocates can use to lobby for legal change.